Jonathan Schanzer
FrontPageMagazine.com | 2/1/2008
The stock market is undergoing a dizzying correction. The subprime mortgage mess has forced credit markets to dry up and has hammered U.S. securities. Fears of recession recently sparked one of the worst stock sell-offs in years. But the worst may be yet to come.
While Americans are selling their positions in U.S. companies, Middle Easterners flush with petrodollars are aggressively gobbling up these stocks at fire sale prices. Moreover, as American financial institutions report the losses that forced them to deplete their cash reserves, CEOs are begging for loans from oil-rich Middle East nations that have benefited from the rise in oil prices in recent years from $30 to nearly $100 per barrel. As one former Wall Street executive lamented, U.S. business leaders are "lining up to kiss the ring."
The procurement of these loans (Wall Street calls them "cash infusions") means that our economic interests are growing increasingly beholden to countries that, at best, do not have America's best interests in mind. At worst, they are nations that could one day use their financial leverage to demand that businesses comply with Islamic law (shari'a) or even fund Islamist charities that siphon off donations to fund violence.
Consider the recent financial news coming out of the Middle East that gives cause for concern:
* Saudi Prince Alaweed bin Talal and the Kuwaiti government have both been at the center of "rescue packages" for Citigroup and Merrill Lynch, both of which were crippled by the sub-prime mortgage meltdown. Indeed, Kuwait invested $5 billion in both companies. The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority of the UAE reportedly snapped up an additional $7.5 billion share in Citigroup.
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The Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. (CFIUS) approved the Dubai stock exchange's December 2007 purchase of 20 percent of the NASDAQ, America's largest electronic exchange. According to Rachel Ehrenfeld and Alyssa Lappen, "this may soon give Dubai access to the troubled Boston Stock Exchange (BSE), through Nasdaq's proposed BSE acquisition, which is now pending before the Securities and Exchange Commission." This deal would also give Dubai access to Nasdaq's 28 percent stake in the London Stock Exchange.
* According to the Arabic daily newspaper ash-Sharq al-Awsat, state-owned Dubai World has started accumulating shares of MGM Mirage, a casino operator, as part of a deal that included the acquisition of 50 percent of a large MGM project in downtown Las Vegas.
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* Qatar, the home of the controversial al-Jazeera television channel, is now considering investing a chunk of its $60 billion sovereign wealth fund in the ailing financial services and construction sector here, according to Middle East Online. Specific company names were not listed. Both sectors have been hobbled by the U.S. housing bust, and both are selling at a discount.
How might this harm America? If any of these investors, or a bloc of investors, gains enough controlling shares of a company, they can exact a dangerous influence. This might include the insistence that a corporation's activities are halal, which would mean jettisoning business interests that include: banks charging interest; firms that are either based in Israel or are working with the Jewish state; firms developing weaponry used in Iraq, Israel, Afghanistan or other Middle Eastern states; casinos and other gambling companies; businesses that involve pork products; alcohol distillers and bottlers; publishers that release books critical of Islam; and even entertainment companies that could offend Muslim sensibilities or appear incompatible with Muslim values.
There is also the fear that Middle Eastern investors could force U.S. companies to provide charitable donations to questionable Islamic charities. As Frank Gaffney notes, once an investment becomes subject to shari'a, at least 2.5 percent of the proceeds are donated to zakat, or charity. Of course, many corporations contribute to charities as a way to give back to the community. But most of the world's Islamic charities are unregulated or are of unknown repute. The U.S. Treasury department continues to uncover illicit charities that provide funds to terrorist organizations worldwide. Thus, there remains a danger that the earnings of U.S.-based businesses would begin to send funds to questionable Islamic charities rather than regulated U.S. charities at home.
There is also a question of whether our new Middle Eastern partners seek the long-term success of the world financial system, upon which most Westerners rely to grow wealth and ensure a comfortable retirement. Indeed, Wahabbists – among which many Saudis and Emiratis can be counted – have little interest in the long-term viability of the U.S.-anchored world financial system. Wahabbists, in fact, seek to destroy the current world system and to return to the world to a time and place in which Islam reigns supreme. Buying out the U.S. stock market would be an easy way to destroy it from within.
Of course, the fear of foreign interests controlling our business interests runs counter to the notion of a free market economy. Indeed, U.S. Treasury officials have even warned against a protectionist backlash that could harm cash flows to the U.S. during a volatile time. But Treasury officials may be working under the mistaken assumption that our new financial partners are ultimately as invested in the world financial markets are we are. Difficult financial policy decisions lie ahead.
Jonathan Schanzer, a former Treasury intelligence analyst, is Director of Policy for the Jewish Policy Center and author of Al-Qaeda's Armies: Middle East Affiliate Groups and the Next Generation of Terror.
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